What is the status of Weaver Scopes?
I have a couple of Weaver Scopes from when Weaver was Weaver but it has changed hands two or three times after it was first sold. I purchased two Weaver Classic V scopes that were made in Japan. They have held up over the years.
The Weaver name now belongs to ATK.
Has anybody recently returned a scope under warranty to Weaver, which was manufactured under the Meade ownership? If so what was your experience with the Meade manufactured Weaver scopes..
http://www.weaveroptics.com/http://www.weaveroptics.com/weaveroptics/Support/warranty.htmlI am currently in the market looking for a serviceable scope to install on a Marlin 336. I would prefer a variable powered cope with a 32-38MM Objective. I want a low profile scope.
Last week I was in a shop that has a couple of Weaver V9 scopes that fit my criteria and most likely were made under the Meade ownership. Did they screw up the product?
Scopes I am currently considering.
Bushnell Elite 3200 in 2-7x32MM price delivered around $180.00
Burris FFII in 2-7x35MM $180.00
Weaver V9 $150.00+tx $165.00
From a price point the Weaver is out ahead. If the product is defective I rather doubt the store’s returning policy will be very liberal. If there is a problem it would be up to me to return the Meade made scope to Weaver who is now ATK owned.
In my eyes the Bushnell Warranty service is difficult to beat.
Burris warranty is an unknown to me.
The other day I held a Browning 2-7x32MM made by Bushnell to 3200 Elite specifications in one hand and the Weaver V9 in the other hand. In comparing those two scopes I think the Weaver came out on top. Both were set at the lowest power setting. The Weaver has fully multi-coated lens, while the Elite has multicoated lens with Rainguard.
Does anybody have information at what yardage the parallax is set at one the Elite 2-7 and the Burris 2-7?
I looked up Meade Optical and it sounds like they are out of the scope business. They have been losing money, and they have been selling off brands.
Application: Marlin 336, in 30-30 Winchester. Sighted in 2” high at 100-yards. With a Point Blank range a little over 200-yards. Historically this rifle has been a heavy cover, nasty weather rifle where game is normally encountered at close range. This is not a go-to rifle. it spends most of its time at home. Rifle currently has a 35-yearold 4-power Banner on it. Objective is to install a fog free, variable profile scope, while maintaining a low profile. Cost is a factor.